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Prevent
Violence:
Disarm the Police
by
Wendy McElroy
Saturday, October 9, 1999
|
Gun opponents who argue
"the police will protect you" are a menace to
your safety. They are also flat wrong. I am not referring
to the overwhelming inability of police to combat crime.
Why state the obvious? I am referring to the fact that
the police have no duty whatsoever to protect you against
criminals. That's not in the job description of 'police
officer.' The courts have recognized this fact for over a
century.
In 1856, the U.S. Supreme Court (South v. Maryland) found
that law enforcement officers had no duty to protect any
individual. Their duty is to enforce the law in general.
More recently, in 1982 (Bowers v. DeVito), the Court of
Appeals, Seventh Circuit held, "...there is no
Constitutional right to be protected by the state against
being murdered by criminals or madmen. It is monstrous if
the state fails to protect its residents... but it does
not violate... the Constitution." Later court
decisions concurred: the police have no duty to protect
you.
Police vehicles routinely sport decals proclaiming
sentiments such as
'Proud to Serve!' If they aren't there to protect you,
the question becomes, "Who are they serving?"
The answer is clear: the police department exists to
enforce the law. Policemen serve the government, not the
people. And uphold the law with total disregard for
whether their actions create or prevent violence. For
example, if government decides that certain forms of
adult consensual crimes must not be tolerated, then the
police will draw their guns and barge into otherwise
peaceful bedrooms. To uphold an unjust law, they will
create violence and victims.
Those who blithely reassure you about police protection
are doubly wrong. Not only is protection not the
officers' job, they may well be the ones who victimize
you. Jews for the Preservation of Firearm Ownership,
correctly observes that the American legal system is
based on the English Common Law. The modern American
policeman dates back centuries to the role of the English
Sheriff, who was paid by and accountable to the
government, not the community. As the JPFO states, the
main purpose of the Sheriff was the "enforcement of
government decisions," such as seizing property.
"Maintenance of public order" was of secondary
concern. Indeed, if the two concerns collided - as in the
enforcement of victimless crime
laws - the government invariably won.
Americans revere the romantic Western notion of Marshall
Dillon defending the schoolmarm against the Bang-'em-Up
gang who swoop down like wolves on the prairie town. But,
often, these sheriffs were hired by the communities and
were responsible to the people there. Moreover, the
townsfolk themselves routinely owned guns. What Americans
are actually revering is an example of a quasi-private
police force functioning within an armed society.
Unfortunately, this image still benefits the modern state
policeman who is routinely glorified by television
programs like Cops! Yet these state-employees
are the antithesis of the Western sheriff. They are
modeled after the British Sheriff - they are responsible
only to enforce government policy and they often are the
wolves.
If policy makers want to prevent violence, they should
consider disarming the police and encouraging gun
ownership within the citizenry. There is historical
precedent. In his book Frontier Justice, Wayne
Gard describes the rampant corruption of politics and
police in 1850's San Francisco. Violence soared until the
SF vigilante committee revived (1856). Within three
months, Gard explains, "San Francisco had only two
murders, compared with more than a hundred in the six
months before the committee was formed."
At least until erring policemen acknowledge a duty to
protect the life and property of individuals, 'the
people' en masse ought to say 'no more donuts for you!' |
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